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Alkaline pretreatment scale up study aiming second-generation eth | 52516
Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications

Journal of Fundamentals of Renewable Energy and Applications
Open Access

ISSN: 2090-4541

+44 1300 500008

Alkaline pretreatment scale up study aiming second-generation ethanol production.


International Congress and Expo on Biofuels & Bioenergy

August 25- 27, 2015 Valencia, Spain

Simone Coelho Nakanishi

Posters-Accepted Abstracts: J Fundam Renewable Energy Appl

Abstract :

Two pretreatment conditions were performed in pilot scale (350 L) in order to provide information about the influence
of different heating and stirring system between bench and pilote scale, namely (A5 - 30 min, 130°C, 1.5% w/v NaOH,
0.15% w/w AQ and A7 - 30 min, 170°C and 1.5% w/v NaOH, 0,15% w/w AQ). The influence of this scale up on mass yield,
solubilization rates and enzymatic conversion was analyzed in order to choose the pretreatment condition that provide the high
glucose yield liquor for second-generation ethanol production. These conditions were elected from a 23 experimental design.
Experiments without anthraquinone (WAQ) were also performed. The anthraquinone addition did not leads to substantial
cellulose preservation in the laboratory scale. However in pilot-scale the AQ addition resulted in 67.4% and 28.5% of cellulose
preservation for reactions at 130°C and 170°C respectively in relation to those studies without it addition. Since diffusion
operates a huge influence on anthraquinone action, the most efficient heating system and agitation of pilot scale in relation to
laboratory scale were probably the determining factors for the more effective performance. Temperature also seems to have
maximal effect on AQ pretreatments performed in pilot scale, where at lower temperature ranges (130°C) the preservation of
cellulose was favored in relation to experiments at 170°C. The scale-up was considered successfully made and considering the
pretreatment mass yield and enzymatic conversion the condition named A5 (130°C, 30 min, 1.5% (w/v), 0.15% (w/w) AQ) was
chosen as the best one resulting in 293 kg of glucose from 1 ton of raw sugarcane bagasse (extrapolating pilote results).

Biography :

Simone Nakanishi is a Biochemical Engineer, Master in Biotechnology at University of São Paulo in collaboration with the Universidad Autónoma de Chihuahua - México
(Biomass Conversion for Membrane production, 2010) and a PhD student at University of São Paulo working with lignocellulosic biomass conversion (pretreatment, enzymatic
hydrolysis, fermentation and lignin characterization) as raw materials for second-generation ethanol and high value-added products.

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